To compare the climate-changing emissions from electric vehicles to gasoline-powered cars, they analyzed all the emissions from fueling and driving both types of vehicles. For a gasoline car, that meant looking at emissions from extracting crude oil from the ground, moving the oil to a refinery, making gasoline and transporting gasoline to filling stations, in addition to the tailpipe emissions from combusting the fuel in the engine.
For electric vehicles, the calculation included both power plant emissions and emissions from the production of coal, natural gas and other fuels power plants use.
When looking at all these factors, driving the average EV is responsible for fewer global warming emissions than the average new gasoline car everywhere in the US. In some parts of the country, driving the average new gasoline car will produce 4 to 8 times the emissions of the average EV.
See Driving Electric Cars Is Much Better For Climate & Air Quality Than Driving Gas Cars
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Courtesy of Union Of Concerned Scientists. By David Reichmuth, Senior Engineer, Clean Transportation Program Electric vehicles have a high profile right now, with EVs featuring prominently in the Biden administration’s and Congress’s plans and also important new vehicle announcements from major automakers like Ford. But what are the climate benefits from switching from gasoline to electricity? While it’s obvious that […]